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Kitchenware and garden tool seasonal favourites

At Odgers and McClelland Exchange Stores Duncan and Megan take care to select tools that you'll use in the garden and kitchen for decades to come. These are the goods you'll reach for daily. They are practical, elegant and beautiful. As one of our customers, Wendy, puts it they are "last-a-lifetime, hand-me-down" heirloom territory. Falcon enamelware, timber utensils, and Mason Csh ceramics seasonal favourites are the go-to kitchenware essentials that you'll need for cooking, including pie dishes in every shape, serving spoons and ladles, tea pots in various sizes, baking and roasting trays, and serveware (plates, bowls, mugs, tumblers). Add to that Burgon and Ball gardening tools to make specific tasks easier from weeding fingers, Royal Horticultural Society endorsed secateurs, and classic trowels and forks, to potato harvesters, and asparagus knives and our popular razor hoe mutli-purpose gardening tool.

For indoor plant lovers, a Burgon and Ball durable galvanized steel indoor watering can with elegant slender spout for targeted watering. Features the elegant new Royal Horticultural Society Flora and...

Falcon enamel miniature saucepan, duck egg with timber handle

$22.95

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You'll find a multitude of uses for this Falcon enamel miniature saucepan from melting butter to warming milk and brewing chai. Available in duck egg with a pouring lip and timber handle. Internal diameter...

Spurtle, porridge stirrer

$12.95

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For the porridge lovers, a timber spurtle or traditional Scottish kitchen tool for stirring oatmeal or porridge. The traditional utensil for making smooth, creamy porridge. The narrow, tapered shaft allows...

Biodynamics educator Hamish Mackay says adding two per cent organic matter to 10 per cent of the world's agricultural land would soak up the excess carbon dioxide needed to rein in climate change. Hamish, and fellow biodynamic farmer Charlie Arnott, was talking to a group of students at their Introduction to Biodynamics course at Glenmore House, owned by Larry and Mickey Robertson, near Camden, NSW. It was a bold statement that captured the group's attention and emphasised the importance of learning biodynamics basics to capture carbon, and improve soil health and water holding capacity of their gardens and farms. Other demonstrated benefits are increased plant yield, disease resistance, and nutritional value. "It's also the quickest way to create more rain," Hamish said. "The more moisture in the soil, the more water can drain in, and be transpired."

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Who we are

Duncan and Megan Trousdale of Odgers and McClelland Exchange Stores seek out useful and beautiful kitchenware inspired by the 120-year retail history of their general merchants store and the tools they use in their kitchen and garden on eight-acres in country NSW.